Category Archives: Royal Navy

Young, Mansel (1854-1929)

Born 1854/1855 in Dublin. Parents Alfred Young and Selina Elizabeth Courtenay Mansel.

1861 Census – HM Ship Laurel, Ship in Ordinary, Hampshire
age 6

1871 Census – no record found

23 December 1880, witness at wedding of his sister Blanche Young and William St Clair Cole at the Parish Church, Fareham
1881 Census No. 11 East Street, Fareham
Unmarried, 26, no occupation

1891 Census No 17 Broad Street, Portsea
unmarried, age 36, Commission Agent – Collector for a Bookmaker, lodger

Married between 1891 and 1895 (no record found)

31 May 1895 son, Alfred Mansel Young born

5 July 1895, listed on birth certificate of son, occupation Assurance Agent, address 13 Broad Street, Southsea

8 June 1897 son, Henry Harper Young born

16 July 1897, registered birth of son; occupation given as Assurance Agent, address 37 Addison Road, Southsea
1901 Census – 2 Woodland Cottage, Woodland St, Portsmouth
age 47, occupation bricklayers labourer, married

1911 Census 13 Woodland St, Kingston, Portsmouth
age 57, Dockyard Labourer, Naval Store Department, widower,
29 March 1929 died pf ursernia and enlarged prostrate, no post mortem. Occupation: general labourer. Address 265 Milton Road, Portsmouth. Death registered by son Henry Harper Young on 30 March 1929, address 6 Woodland Street, Kingston.

[could not find a Probate Record]

Mansel, Thomas

Thomas Mansel entered the Navy, in 1798, as Fst.-cl. Vol., on board the HYAENA 24, Capts. Hon. Courtenay Boyle and David Lloyd, stationed at first in the North Sea and afterwards in the Mediterranean. Removing as Midshipman, in 1800, to the ELEPHANT 74, Capts. Thomas Foley and George Dundas, he served in that ship under Lord Nelson at the battle of Copenhagen 2 April, 1801, and on proceeding to the West Indies took part in the operations of 1803 against the French at St. Domingo. Between the summer of 1804, on 16 Sept. in which year he was confirmed a Lieutenant, and the date of his promotion to the rank of Commander, 15 June, 1814, we find him serving, in every quarter of the globe, in the PORTMAHON sloop, Capt. Sam. Chambers, BARRACOUTA schooner, commanded by himself, RACOON 18, capt. Edward Crofton, AVON 18, Capt. Mauritius Adolphus Newton De Starck, DREADNOUGHT 98, Capt. Wm. Lechmere,VOLONTAIRE 38, Capt. Chas. Bullen, HIBERNIA 110, Capt. R.J.Neve, TROUBRIDGE armed ship, under his own orders, DRAGON 74,bearing the flag of Sir Fras. Laforey, and BARHAM 74, Capt.John Wm. Spranger. He was wounded, during that period, in the boats of the RACOON at the recapture of a merchant vessel off Cuba – was present in the AVON (after having escorted a Russian ship of the line to the Baltic, and Mr. Erskine, H. M. Minister, to the United States) in a gallant escape made by that vessel from the French 74-gun ship Regulus – aided, when in the VOLONTAIRE, in conveying the present King of the French to Malta, as also in capturing the island of Pomegue, near Marseilles, and in destroying Fort Rioux, mounting 14 guns, near Cape Croisette- and commanded the TROUBRIDGE at the reduction of the Isle of France. His last appointment was 13 April, 1831, to the Coast Guard, in which service he continued until posted 12 Feb. 1834.
[British Naval Biographical Dictionary, 1849]